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PAGE FOUR ‘THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1927 - —— - ——— \ i ‘ submission to death at his hand the best way F ! iThe Bismarck Tribune of proving that we have a right to live? | A Hunch For the Big Boys : a . la ~) td tells dled It is like saying, “This watch is my prop- f THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER erty, but I’d rather see you snatch it away than Frank Mc (Rotablished 1873) try to stop you.” Rr) Dr A Pabiished by the Bismarck Tribune Company,| Or, “This house and lot are mine, but if you! The Fast. 2 heal Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at|seize the deed to it, I cannot possibly prevent | 1 {gBismerck 9 second class mail matter. it because I do not believe in stealing.” nm I George D. Mann.......... t and Publisher! ~ Now, wha! do you make of that? Subscription Rates Payable In Advance Healt Bed ALY per Mhatd 3 snes) 7 ally by mall, per year, (in Bismarck) . THE SALISBURY DIET iti Daily by mai, pe: years x) Years ago, when I was Cees tienoa poe id hg aoe id Lio * + vegetarian, it was my good fortune| F; 1 tory experiments, i Daily by mail, outside of North I When Corn Is King to come across a book written, by ayer ar ft eapeaabe “4 3 1 Weekly by mail. in state, per year + 1.00 (New York Times) Dr. Salisbury, an English physician.| teaching patients how to cure acid- t Satie Ae me ee sae 2.60| It is only a few weeks since Kansas reported This book outlined a treatment for| osis, Iam convinced that there is not r ee 7 an, In slate, teree 4 Hi . 3 | disease which struck a new note in h hat f I Weekly by m outside of North Pe the corn crop growing so t at t at armers | the study-of dietetics, The writer 7 year 1.59/ could hear it as they stood in their fields. Now| claimed to cure practically every ail- Dr. McCoy will’ gladly answer é aA from Iowa, through a professor from the Towa | ment by placing the patient on a] personal questions on health and uF a 7 fated Press State College, comes an enthusiastic statement} dietetic regime, consisting of ground|| diet, addrer-ed to him, care of ; ‘aL AD al neeeb is i jabout the success of experimental work in util round steak and raw vegetables. The|| the Tribune. % a ‘ The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the| "> : sae pie of by duct: claims he put out were so startling Enclose a stamped addressed ; ‘4 ico fer republication of ali news dispatches credited to| izing cornstalks for all manner of by-products. | that I immediately started experi-|] envelope for reply. F “it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the |The city dweller, whose knowledge of corn is] menting according to his system to r ioral news of spontaneous origin published herein. All| that it is the king of vegetables, is surprised tu| find out what there could be in his| 1° ois yeas t " i ights of republication of sll cther matter herein are learn that it has any other uses. Prior to pro-| claims. e slightest excuse for believing reserved ° we chia red ? Be | I was agreeably surprised to see| that acid fruits have any effect : hibition, to be sure, he had heard of a drink| “ y surprised whatsoever in creating this condi- { “ oh y q) | PAT such diseases as rheumatism and| Foreign Representatives usually spoken of as “corn” which was said to| WHY NOT, PATRONIZE THE bright’s disease disappear rapidly| tion. In order to understand this G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY be delectably potent. In the days when labor- BEAUTY FARIORS, BOYS 7 under this strange treatment which Luis) it spl first of =) to knew CHICAGO DETROIT |ers were paid $1.25 for ten hours of work he AICEATMENT, was so diametrically opposite to the simply defined ‘ae achdiinvietiontion Tower Bldg. : Kresge Bldg.| was also familiar with the so-called corncob CEASE das algtetle proceddre |i such) Ce the tiated OE! thas Bede) The PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH pipe. Today, according to Professor Sweeney | “By careful, unprejudiced “investi-| causes are varied, It is a condition NEW YORK : eae Fifth Ave. Bldg.|of the Iowa State College, cornstalks are being gation I soon discovered the reason| Present with such diseases as dia- ; used for everything from lumber to embalming this revolutionary diet yielded such Lec i uae i teed fevers, P (Official City, State and County Newspaper) fluids. He estimates the value of the 90 per remarkable results. First of all,,it Seer and inte TGR: tke ‘ me ion’: stalks which is very simple diet and that alone] St i ran ; > ‘ ‘A Special Session cent or more of the nation’s cornsta accounts for a great deal of its suc-| digestion, tonsilitis and, in fact, al- : 4 PI ial| HOW 80 to waste at about one billion dollars. | cess. Also, all excess food fermenta-| most all ailments. The normal state ‘ Governor Sorlie’s announcement of a special) i¢ this can be reclaimed on a paying basis, it! tion is avoided in the absence of any| of the bodily tissues is alkaline, and, session should have the effect of determining) i) he an immense gain’for the farmers and, starches or sugars. Even with the| in all diseases, bad ee) of living for all time the future of state ownership in| fo. the nation at large. | large amount of protein food con- pepe Maid del 1 North Dakota. It is within the province of the)" ‘The chemical industry takes the ercdit for| aur Fee ANaCEeat Ge ee selves. Chief among these errors in rt (3 legislature to take such action as may seem nec-) +44 experimental work in utilizing cornstalks having a tendency to produce flatu. | living are the use of wrong quality essary in this crisis. Both the Mill and Eleva-| ¢,. by-products. As a matter of fact the part lence immediately relieves one from| and quantity of food, improper com- tor and State Bank have been more or less po-| Hayed by chemists and other scientists in ag- the distress of being a “walking gas| binations of food, insufficient ex: : litical footballs, creating campaign thunder for | ricuttural research is one of the most interest- facta Ne cree Cie ayereat ure UeabuB hee 1 the “outs” and keeping the ‘ins’ busy with ing developments of the times. Not only has ae tee A eae the Bad combinations of food will pro- reports, charges and countercharges. much work been done to determine the meth- good resulta, duce excess fermentation with the The policy of state ownership was brought) oq, of using vegetable products, but experi- Daily Salisbury Regime consequential creation of flatulence ‘ upon North Dakota by a vote of the people) ments have been made to ascertain the most Three times daily eat one-fourth] and hyperacidity of the stomach and , through initiated and referred laws and consti-| savorable conditions of growth of many plants.) of a pound of ee steak eae Pepe ELI leit me : tutional amendments during the hectic days. os and to facilitate their culture and control the judges made final inspection, he Sa “One half hour before i dnautaeal ‘iy even the best foods will take two-thirds action of the legislative blight. Much interesting work of this sort has was straight as an arrow—but with| each meal drink a pint of warm| will also generaate toxins. body on elt pees datd or Hi aes AK been done by the Boyce Thompson Institute for ea ‘a i tol S20 also sip one pint ot warm| All enervating | pear en ‘ radical changes in the operation of these !n-)bjant Research at Yonkers. Methods of has- le heard one judge whisper to| water while eating the meal. _‘| ergy which is needed in = 4 geen i i has decided t tening the sprouting of dormant potato tubers i oh Sieur ae thers wal the sotines gisele ieee Halter miei the bly, attenpte ty" chieteally ‘ Governor Sorlie evidently has deci Jeornes| 274, of discovering the optimum temperature I i I And the other judge nodded. Then! red, lean part of round steak from| change the food materials “nto use- place all the cards on the table. He welcomss| fo the germination of seeds have been studied BY RODNEY DUTCHER carry a little money he sometimes| ‘te judges withdrew in a group and] which all fat and gristle have been| ful substances which can be assim- an impartial _ investigation of state affairs for a number of years. Experiments have been| Washington, Oct. 19.—The first Heisei HAA eae pets turned their back to reach an agree-| removed. This is more palatable} ilated by throwing out large quan- a through a legislative session, but he is unwill-|made with artificial sunlight in order to dis-| tangible evidence that Senator J.| always confiscated that and finaily| Tete, While the, multitude below the| than Hamburger steak as the oe ieee aude RA einGen ‘ #3 ing that these industries should continue to b€| cover the ideal light condition for different| Boomboom McWhorter is a candidate| the boy gave up in sheer disgust| Platform roared. | difieeent flavor than when the fat| fect of this is to lower the Bloods hampered by political reports, barrages and| tyne of grain and vegetables. In short, scien- bi hee ‘frosiicntial: steatemton is and came; snecording to, the: es Beaming confidently, MeWhorter| is left in and makes it more whole-| alkalinity producing a state of the sabotage. F 4 jc.| tific investigation has been made of all phases] here of a pamphlet purporting tol Bene of Sate ete ntionist.| relaxed for a moment ‘and resumed| some. Make into thin patties and| tissues, favorable to any of the He contemplates consideration of other is-/o¢ plant growth and how it is helped and hin-| he an account of the senator's life| mies will sift at this lest, ctate:| Bis natural contour, Suddenly, just| bake in the oven for about five min-| deficiency diseases, The blood is ( wi sues such as Missouri river diversion and there] gered, The many interesting results of this| and times, ment, but let them sniff—aelong as eee let eae, ine Jigs utes a eee in a dry. hot pan ce nae see veto ‘ 2 4 urely scientific interest. 7 : ook to draw himself in again—bu' k, return to your usual| (change of tissue es place an j be given for all sides to be heard and for’ the aed ; count m : Jy | cover and the contents.comprise all piucaees it was too late. He was even ignored lat danced "diet and yonial find] the etl is that the system does gs . 4 The experiments with corn are particularly} jrresistible refutat: f th The senator's original name was i well-bal y . ’ citizens of the state, through their elective] interesting because of the fact that corn has| cf certain jealous sale eutepras| unk John oF Tec kaaracaa pouimight| Woe oe cata leben oeeae many symptoms, such as flatulence,| not have the proper resistance : representatives, to express their desfres upon| become one of the world’s greatest crops. Na-| fess to believe that McWhorter real-| think. It was Joses. Old Man Mc-| Mcwhorter returved home broke and ere eee répen tanibesanitn SEE een iterally idiine ers { what is best to be done. tive to the American continents, it has, of| !y isn’t such a much. ene ae that the baby disconsolate, but determined yet to} any with marked benefit. The te-| than it is being built up and the Ni ‘ In the meantime a thorough check of the) course, been widely developed in the United| ,,4 ferword carefully explains that] be named Moses because he probably| make a name «for himself, tummy sults will teach you the great di-' closer to death one comes, the less | fact-finding report is being made by auditors|States, The Indians used it for food centuries eee enbtas caeaee rs Maas Mewheree deimetons the| oT no ammy. etetic truth that: excess fermentation| the normal alkalinity of the blood representing both factions in the controversy.| before the white man landed here, and devel-| ficial Washington which hes seeal name Joseph in honor of hee Uncle iene ete te me sere of food is responsible for many| exists. The first signs will he de- . Peamencnts will ie aus ae ——, oped numerous different strains suitable to| similar pampblets before. Mike. So whee Mr; McWhorter Bes first time. will described dn abe symptoms, and ue cauned by pression, coated tongue, Poor cireula- ) le interest and North Dakota shou! e able} a; ate " .| At any rate. it’s the first time; came stubborn about it, the mother] ~, is ¢ #4 pe ce | to decide how best to end the interminable forts of scientists corn ea be evowrn far an she slice han been done, for the| of is shila heaved am anil wt mim] “MEME anatches, mists fait Sod Actors _| Es retuced to the prone amount and | A hs ;! oagg ry M senator has been wearing an injure Ic] noc! 0: is hat or e | rs rae ., exe wrangling which is doing the state or its peo-Inorth, and even in the tropics. It is now one| took ever since he was cdvised that| first time in many months and Old f BARBS For many yours, in-iny writings|icombined Eropethy der a _ Ple no good. Naturally, no business, public or) 4¢ the principal crops of Java, in the Dutch| any senator who supplied more than| Man McWhorter walked about in a and lectures, I have ee pee [esta nape ee sey retetstleat a chert : private, can thrive while under constant fire. | Rast Indies. three pages for the biographical sec-| daze, muttering “Moses, Joseph,| | essary to explain aay a alitoei ibe dino, acnintiaalisaeesvedllinceiie ‘ This newspaper holds no brief for state own-| Despite this wide distribution of corn for} tio, of the Co gressional Directory| Moseph, Joses—” and so on untill Don’t you suppose the New York] belicf that acid fruits have a direct| and no erehi It has always been against that prin- espite . 7 1 would have to pay for the extra] Mrs. McWhorter took pity on her| judge who made that ruling about - aaa alway: 7 : food purposes, it has been estimated that only printing. spouse and agreed to compromise! scantily clad chorus girls had lots - is ciple or theory of government, but it believes} snout g per cent of the cornstalks of the coun- gee with Joses. And Joses it was until]of fun explaining to his wife why ang in fair play. It feels that Governor Sorlie has/try are profitably uscd. Of thig the major] No attempt is made to conceal the| young McWhorter, entering politics,|he didn't’ handle some different ) conducted a clean and honest administration] notion has until recently gone into silos for| Senator's humble origins, The elder| contracted it to Jo for the sake of| kind of case? Aus of the state’s business. At times he has la-|> Th ss of companies utilizing vari-| McWhorter was only 1 horseshoe] dignity. Anne om, bored under terrific handicaps because of uae mone ; oan nee ae Hones Bre ees ve ocheel aseaswes suc bron | ae castern university announces} yaith, dressed for the dinner| ludicrous surprise and se ‘ i aay . ou: S si is s assured ittle McWhorter used to carry] igy that the teachers couldn’t teach| i as _reacher ie “saturation penne it, iance of her joy. ‘ aed er schisms, -_ a as ae eles that we may expect a, general development of| the horseshoes for his father and] him, hardly anything. (They did euc-| point.” ‘The hip flask evidently has] Paty, raised her bare arma to clasp aah mare re mite } | _ to the best interests o! e state and he has . in i stry—always providing} then run out and retrieve them! ceed, however, in teaching him that| been successful, a choker of gleaming cut crystals, f th hoisted suddenly on = attended to business ardertly at all times. Pee ne cor uan dus Fite ay HOMME | after they were pitched. One day a| while a teacher might stand for a = s the exact shade of her ruby-red re mek a “Is that nice? ‘Where ( He should by all means throw wide open|‘"*" ‘7° © i : horseshoe hit little McWhorter in) tack in her chair now and then, the] | Style arbiters say a business man| transparent velvet dress, about het| in the world did you get that dress, i = every avenue of investigation for the opposi- Is Al Smith Going to Straddle? the noes Poe enea eros a useatiapikes wesants earch. this any a epee rire lovely long neck. Her large brown Baia mS though tes: peter] det \ - tion to prove their contentions. No good can ipncaccl Whorter’s brain but, as the senator for the wife. eyes, velvety black at night, studied} Pat), hion parade! i : ie 4 : ‘ Py (Minneapolis Journal) ‘ter’s bre y nat At the age of 20 young Joses Mc- up like a fasl pal = come of continuing the whispering campaign Al Smith kept the liquor question out of the| ¢xPlains it, it was very beneficial,’ Whorter entered a male bathing A hi a her reflection critically in the full-| thought,” she added, noddi > or the thimble-rigging that has been evident 5 neath eneant ;| and after that he had many bright| beauty contest and came within a oe ts one, was stolen in Kan-| tength mirror of the closet door. | head with malicious significa - * during the last few months. New York State Democratic Conv ention, ideas which he had never had before.| few inches of winning, ‘The story is| 53% but the police recovered it. Law “What's wrong with me? Why| “there was something darned fishy , "| e a now wets and drys aliks see signs of an inten. Little McWhorter was taught the| now revealed for the first time. Mc- epforsement is just getting worse! |. he love mien she asked her-| about your inviting Bruce Patton * The Speech J tion on the Governor’s part to do an adroit! peril of strong drink at an early age.| Whorter was then in the pink of |9%4 worse. self despairingly, the glow of pride| to dinner! Who'd have believed ; : Shepard ddl the prohibition issue, when the Every night little McWhorter had/ condition, but he had already begun ited States ¢ in the picture of aristocratic smart-| it? Faith, of all people, Well! % F , |straddle on the p i » | The Uni Pi ic s Recent! f 222 auth: edi bi Ly 3 7 to trot down to the brewery and] to develop the protruding abdomen ited States sent a new am. r ponte ; ently a jury o authors, editors, busi- bone-dry Democrats of the South and West as- bring home a bucket of beer for his| nit 4 Pp P f hi iz t dis | Passador to Mexico. That country| Ness that she made fading slowly. NEXT: The dinner, 4 hess men and teachers returned a verdict which| semble next summer with the mostly moist] pop, until his pop began to observe| tinctive features, Well, “he” was) iidn't lose any time in showing him| Bob was in the bathroom now, v iy put an o K on misuse of “shall” and “will” and) Democrats of the East and North to select the that the older and fatter little Mc-| smart enough to know that that pod peek bse kind of @ job he had on shaving Ase ies UA aBARer: Bs ! 4 “who” and “whom.” ,{party’s nominee for the Presidency. __, | Whorter grew, the farther the foam| of his would be absolutely fatal Ye ce er's, lay spread on his bed. He had f Old Masters a i _ They had determined, they reported, that!" A” forecast that such would be the Smith! “One day Pop McWhorter sneaked| 2, > p seanieat where he must) ‘Those who put their money into| not yet seen her in the new dress,| 4 ——_______-@ \ : { usage had taken the sting from much that was strategy in 1928 was made many months ago. bibs? ‘ appear ii thing suit. a nice new shiny sedan instead of| did not even know she had made iled. They saiied. Then ‘') 4 ategy in y 9, out and followed his son back} So Joses adopted the simple but|?.” qd They sailed. y &} ; formerly bad grammar and to refuse to recog-| and, if memory serves, by a dry Republican. | from the brewery and, as a result of| e¢feetive expedient of hol uae St in,| £078 to the Dempsey-Tunney fight| herself one. No one knew but Aunt|/""°Y 200 the mates. | | | nize the popular locutions as at least quasi-cor-|" }¢ the patronage-hungry South, seeing in| what he saw, the lad took a terrible| As the ‘paraded before the sudges,| 27° the Wise ones these chilly days. Herel Hathawy the ddes aoe) on mad ‘sea shows its teeth es . . it is ii . ‘er ° - *, i rect pola pete petase to maintain pace with! smith the only Democrat with a possible chan tanning, and Che paree always came| no longer aia the waist of his suit) Forty-seven translators, divided| come,” the soft voice of the color- He bos lip, he lies in wait, the trend of the times. to win at the polls, is willing to swallow its dis-| "°When the boy grew old enough to] (ome,two oF three inches out beyond! into six committees, worked on the| ed waitress she had gotten from an| "with lifted teeth, as if to bitel Sticklers for ultra-correct grammar have like for the New York Governor in return for} y ie! his chin. As he stood in line wi ile| St. James version of the Bible. employment agency for the evening | Brave Admiral, say but one arisen in their wrath and excoriate this jury for returning a verdict that is as sane as it is mer- ited; but we do advance and our language must advance with us. Usage, indeed, must deter- mine for us the correctness of form, not only in language but in conduct. The manners and the speech of yesterday belong to yesterday. The language and speech of today belong just to today, for tomorrow they will again change to conform to the advances made by civiliza- tion, to the inevitable adjustments made by humans as they come is closer and closer con- tact with each other, mentally and physically ‘Your True Pacifist svea you take up arms in defense of your count “No! I do not believe in killing. Rather than kill I would be killed.” : The question was asked by a Chicago fed- eral judge and the reply was by Madame Ro- sika Schwimmer, internationally known Aus- » trian pacifist and lecturer and well-remembered H | member of fhe Ford peace expedition. wimmer had fulfilled all the cit uirements in her application to be- of the United States. Then ’s question. The reply, of Schwimmer the right since a citizen of this country to take up arms in its defensd. from the t of the case, there teresting philosophical angle. Suppose killed because he or she does not . Self-defense, the first law is violated, and the right to to read, “Every man is en- of life, liberty and the pur- ‘Provided someone does not life is the thing we to Aol with the t a finger against any is it not, igen: cume a Madame nship a neutral position qn the liquor issue, and if the thirsty East is willing to forego a wet platform plank in exchange for the virtually unopposed ‘nomination of its idol, then the new Tammany tactics may prove shrewd. But if the South turns down any such pact, and if the Eastern wets outside of New York insist on making liquor a clear-cut*issue, then the new strategy of neutrality, if such it be, may hinder Governor Smith’s convention chances, instead of helping them. The possible tactical advantage of a puss foot stand on prohibition by Governor Smith, once he is nominated, is obvious. It combines a reliance on the willingness of dry Southern- ers to vote their section’s traditional ticket while pretending to believe Smith is not really wet, with a reliance on the willingness of wet Easterners to vote for a man known to be wet, despite his unwillingness to commit himself on the issue. All very well, if both the dry horse and the wet horse will stand hitched at the same time. Anyone wishing to wager that a dry horse and a wet horse would stand quietly hitched to- gether for any considerable period, probably could get mighty good odds, Harvest Made in Record Time (St. Paul Dispatch) The peak of the small grain season is over. The golden flood is ended in record time. Fine, dry September weather and new threshing and reaping machinery put a speed in this harvest that had not been before noted. The greater use of the truck is also a factor, A youth in Morton county, North Dakota, for example, bought a new light type truck af the beginning ~EGAD BUSTER M'LAD, FoRTY-FIVE YEARS AGO 3 NEXT TUESDAY, “THis WORLD WAS ENRICHED BY-THE ARRIVAL OF A NONE OTHER “THAN of harvest. The price was $916. Working 32 's he earned enough in hauling grain to make full payment on the truck. The truck makes eng tne to three by a team. Over every peel Ved ay Dd ra al only ion e railroad organization prevented ? jam in LUSTY YouNGsTeR, WHO LATER ON BECAME FAMED AND ADMIRED ALL OVER THE GLOBE ? ~~ AHEM, M'SELF !«~ FoRTY-FIVE, AND AS FITAS A FIDDLE! = IF MY MEMORY HAST A GRID-LEAK, YouR BIRTHDAY Is SOMETIME I MAY! < —~< AN’ AS FoR BEING FoRTY-FiveE, Yous CANT EVER CLAIM-THAT For YouR WAIst MEASURE !. z, A OUGHT-1o BE im is Gru q65 =. FIVE, MY NURSE PINCHED FoR LETTING ME ALMosT SMOKE “THIS ee BAC interrupted her anxious scrutiny and reverie, She had cooked the dinner her- self, with Aunt Hattie’s - help—a clear chicken consomme; filet of sole Marguery, to be served with tiny home-made Parker House rolls; creamed chicken in pate shells; tiny cireles of glazed beets, like flattened out rubies; crisp sticks of egg plant Julienne; bright greer Be nage jin- ach, dusted over with golden bits of hard-boiled egg-yolk; long, brittle, fresh leaves of Romaine lettuce, its delicate n to be contrasted with the TES raliened French salad dressing; cheese sticks which. she had made herself, to be served with the salad; a poem of a dessert—a big “ice-box cake,” ruby-red, covered with fluffy whipped cream, dotted with shopped, toasted almonds and encircled with golden-yellow lady- fingers. She would cut the cake at table, so ae - guests could see it first in its glory. As she nee ged the dark-red, velvety roses in a silver. basket as a centerpiece for the dinner table she smiled a little at her selfishness in choosing flowers that would em- phasize own quiet beauty, match the rich color of her new gown. How Cherry would be, ses she 4 imperiously suggested pink roses Sera cia ae cl tet oe Pho wear. But for once of herself eee for evening could not possibly be as impgreant to Cherry as it was to her.* Cherry had always had every- thing, had always come first—even : long-stemmed yeiehiee Parag vase on the rd: What shall we do when hope is gone?” \The words leapt like a leaping agai ont Sail oat Sail ont and on!” Then, pale and “worn, he kept his And reeed throws darkness. Of all dark nights! And then @ a ‘light! @ light! » light! a light! It grew, a starlit flag unfurled It grew to be Time’s burgt of dawn. i He gained a world; he gave that world iy : Its grandest lesson: “On! Sail ont” —Joaquin Miller: From Columbus. Sanitariums are places where women who are run down wind-up, Te against us? . Is] transportation.